16,570 research outputs found
Market Equilibrium with Transaction Costs
Identical products being sold at different prices in different locations is a
common phenomenon. Price differences might occur due to various reasons such as
shipping costs, trade restrictions and price discrimination. To model such
scenarios, we supplement the classical Fisher model of a market by introducing
{\em transaction costs}. For every buyer and every good , there is a
transaction cost of \cij; if the price of good is , then the cost to
the buyer {\em per unit} of is p_j + \cij. This allows the same good
to be sold at different (effective) prices to different buyers.
We provide a combinatorial algorithm that computes -approximate
equilibrium prices and allocations in
operations -
where is the number goods, is the number of buyers and is the sum
of the budgets of all the buyers
Oscillatory Tunnel Splittings in Spin Systems: A Discrete Wentzel-Kramers-Brillouin Approach
Certain spin Hamiltonians that give rise to tunnel splittings that are viewed
in terms of interfering instanton trajectories, are restudied using a discrete
WKB method, that is more elementary, and also yields wavefunctions and
preexponential factors for the splittings. A novel turning point inside the
classically forbidden region is analysed, and a general formula is obtained for
the splittings. The result is appled to the \Fe8 system. A previous result for
the oscillation of the ground state splitting with external magnetic field is
extended to higher levels.Comment: RevTex, one ps figur
Probing the indefinite CP nature of the Higgs Boson through decay distributions in the process
The recently discovered scalar resonance at the LHC is now almost confirmed
to be a Higgs Boson, whose CP properties are yet to be established. At the ILC
with and without polarized beams, it may be possible to probe these properties
at high precision. In this work, we study the possibility of probing departures
from the pure CP-even case, by using the decay distributions in the process
, with mainly decaying into a
pair. We have compared the case of a minimal extension of the SM case (Model I)
with an additional pseudoscalar degree of freedom, with a more realistic case
namely the CP-violating Two-Higgs Doublet Model (Model II) that permits a more
general description of the couplings. We have considered the ILC with
\,GeV and integrated luminosity of . Our
main findings are that even in the case of small departures from the CP-even
case, the decay distributions are sensitive to the presence of a CP-odd
component in Model II, while it is difficult to probe these departures in Model
I unless the pseudoscalar component is very large. Noting that the proposed
degrees of beam polarization increases the statistics, the process demonstrates
the effective role of beam polarization in studies beyond the Standard Model.
Further, our study shows that an indefinite CP Higgs would be a sensitive
laboratory to physics beyond the SM.Comment: 14 pages using revtex, 10 figures, corresponds to version accepted
for publication in Phys. Rev. D.; compared to v1, discussion extended, figure
added, table added, section reorganize
Online Learning Models for Content Popularity Prediction In Wireless Edge Caching
Caching popular contents in advance is an important technique to achieve the
low latency requirement and to reduce the backhaul costs in future wireless
communications. Considering a network with base stations distributed as a
Poisson point process (PPP), optimal content placement caching probabilities
are derived for known popularity profile, which is unknown in practice. In this
paper, online prediction (OP) and online learning (OL) methods are presented
based on popularity prediction model (PPM) and Grassmannian prediction model
(GPM), to predict the content profile for future time slots for time-varying
popularities. In OP, the problem of finding the coefficients is modeled as a
constrained non-negative least squares (NNLS) problem which is solved with a
modified NNLS algorithm. In addition, these two models are compared with
log-request prediction model (RPM), information prediction model (IPM) and
average success probability (ASP) based model. Next, in OL methods for the
time-varying case, the cumulative mean squared error (MSE) is minimized and the
MSE regret is analyzed for each of the models. Moreover, for quasi-time varying
case where the popularity changes block-wise, KWIK (know what it knows)
learning method is modified for these models to improve the prediction MSE and
ASP performance. Simulation results show that for OP, PPM and GPM provides the
best ASP among these models, concluding that minimum mean squared error based
models do not necessarily result in optimal ASP. OL based models yield
approximately similar ASP and MSE, while for quasi-time varying case, KWIK
methods provide better performance, which has been verified with MovieLens
dataset.Comment: 9 figure, 29 page
Where we stand on structure dependence of ISGMR in the Zr-Mo region: Implications on K_\infty
Isoscalar giant resonances, being the archetypal forms of collective nuclear
behavior, have been studied extensively for decades with the goal of
constraining bulk nuclear properties of the equation of state, as well as for
modeling dynamical behaviors within stellar environments. An important such
mode is the isoscalar electric giant monopole resonance (ISGMR) that can be
understood as a radially symmetric density vibration within the saturated
nuclear volume. The field has a few key open questions, which have been
proposed and remain unresolved. One of the more provocative questions is the
extra high-energy strength in the region, which manifested in
large percentages of the sum rule in Zr and Mo above the
main ISGMR peak. The purpose of this article is to introduce these questions
within the context of experimental investigations into the phenomena in the
zirconium and molybdenum isotopic chains, and to address, via a discussion of
previously published and preliminary results, the implications of recent
experimental efforts on extraction of the nuclear incompressibility from this
data.Comment: 9 pages, 7 figures, invited to be submitted to a special issue of
EPJA honoring Prof. P. F. Bortigno
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